North Korea requests meeting with U.N. Security Council

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Photos:South Korea, U.S. hold 'largest ever' drills

South Korean and U.S. troops staged an amphibious assault Saturday, March 12 as U.S. and South Korean military units embarked on eight weeks of annual joint military exercises.

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Photos:South Korea, U.S. hold 'largest ever' drills

Clouds of camouflage smoke obscure amphibious assault vehicles coming into shore as part of military exercises on March 12. South Korea's defense ministry spokesman is calling the maneuvers "the largest scale ever," involving 300,000 South Korean soldiers and at least 17,000 from the U.S.

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Photos:South Korea, U.S. hold 'largest ever' drills

A South Korean Marine looks through a viewfinder on a sniper rifle on March 12. Marines and sailors stormed a beach aboard assault vehicles in a mock amphibious assault.

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Photos:South Korea, U.S. hold 'largest ever' drills

A South Korean Marine looks through his rifle's view finder on March 12 with an amphibious assault vehicle in the background.

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Photos:South Korea, U.S. hold 'largest ever' drills

A South Korea marine holds an assault rifle in the March 12 exercises.

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Photos:South Korea, U.S. hold 'largest ever' drills

Small detachments of forces from Australia and New Zealand also participated in Saturday's maneuvers.

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Photos:South Korea, U.S. hold 'largest ever' drills

South Korean Marines group crouch between two amphibious assault vehicles during the March 12th drill.

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Photos:South Korea, U.S. hold 'largest ever' drills

South Korean Marines points their weapons during the joint military exercises held on March 12.

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Photos:South Korea, U.S. hold 'largest ever' drills

Protesters call for a more peaceful atmosphere on the Korean peninsula as South Korea and U.S. troops hold joint military exercises on March 12.

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Story highlights

North Korea's ambassador to U.N. says U.S.-South Korean military drills are a "beheading operation"

(CNN)The North Korean ambassador to the U.N. has filed a request for the body's Security Council to meet over the ongoing U.S.-South Korean joint military exercises.

The letter, obtained by CNN, calls the "Key Resolve" and "Foal Eagle 16" joint military operations, the largest to date, "aggressive" and directed toward the DPRK, an acronym for North Korea used by the regime.

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The letter, written by North Korea's Permanent Representative, Ambassador, JA Song Nam, and addressed to the the president of the Security Council, Ismael Abraao Gaspar Martins, alleges that the operations are a "beheading operation" aimed to remove the supreme leadership of the DPRK and "bring down its social system."

Previous attempts by North Korea to convene the Security Council have failed.

Earlier this month the regime threatened a preemptive nuclear strike over the war games, which are held annually but have this year been ramped up to include 300,000 South Korean troops and at least 17,000 U.S. forces.

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The two exercises will run until April 30. "Foal Eagle" will involve ground, air, naval and special operations forces from both militaries.

The request comes after the Security Council, including North Korea's longstanding ally China, voted on tougher sanctions on the North in the wake of Pyongyang's purported nuclear and rocket tests earlier in the year.

On Wednesday, the White House announced new sets of sanctions on the regime, independent of the U.N. restrictions.

Obligation cited

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In the letter to the Security Council, the ambassador suggested that the body was obliged by the U.N. Charter to take the matter under consideration, and that a failure to do so would undermine its credibility.

Articles 34 and 35 of the U.N. Charter allow the Security Council to investigate "any dispute, or any situation which might lead to international friction," and gives member states the right to refer such situations to the attention of the Council.

The letter also references the U.N.'s "dealing with the DPRK's so-called 'human rights situation'" and suggests that addressing the U.S.-South Korean joint operations more crucial to "maintaining international peace and security" than focusing on North Korea's human rights record.

Human rights dismissed

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The letter comes shortly after North Korea announced that a U.S. student, Otto Frederick Warmbier, had been sentenced to 15 years of hard labor after accusing him of removing a political banner from a hotel.

The sentence against the University of Virginia student is "unduly harsh," State Department spokesman Mark Toner said, calling for his release.